In Britain (and probably elsewhere in Europe) there is the European Computer Driving Licence (ECDL). See for example the page at my University:
http://www.liv.ac.uk/csd/training/ecdl/index.htm
or the general site:
http://www.ecdl.org/publisher/index.jsp
Cynics might say it is simply about training people to use all the Microsoft Office packages.
Looking at the information there seems indeed to be a much greater emphasis on using desktop packages than on teaching generic IT skills.
Godfried
-- Dr. Godfried Croenen Director of Graduate Studies School of Cultures, Languages and Area Studies University of Liverpool Chatham Street Liverpool L69 7ZR United Kingdom
Tel: +44 (0)151 794 2763 Fax: +44 (0)151 794 2357 e-mail: G.Croenen@Liverpool.ac.uk Personal webpage: http://www.liv.ac.uk/~gcroenen/index.htm Research webpage: http://www.liv.ac.uk/info/staff/A69646
-----Original Message----- From: dm-l-bounces@uleth.ca [mailto:dm-l-bounces@uleth.ca] On Behalf Of Marjorie Burghart Sent: 27 February 2009 20:17 To: dm-l@uleth.ca Subject: Re: [dm-l] Ideal informatics training [TAN, maybe]
Hello Dan! You may be interested to know that French student are proposed the C2i, or "Certificat Informatique et Internet". It's a national certification organized in the universities, with the adequate lectures (it follows a B2i or "Brevet Informatique et Internet", delivered in high school / secondary school). In my "Alma Mater", I know students can try to pass the C2i level 1 at the end of their 1st year, but it's often tough to them and many fail (they can try again). You'll find some more information in English here: http://www2.c2i.education.fr/sections/en/presentation/ including a referential of the general and transverse skills mandatory for the "basic" C2i http://www2.c2i.education.fr/sections/en/c2il1/c2i1ref You'll see that there are several C2i "options", for teachers and several fields of studies (sadly, humanities are not one of them). The C2i is well planned in France now, with many expert trainers, and if you want to get in touch with experimented C2i teachers / examinators I'd be happy to try and act as a go between and direct you to some contacts.
Good luck :) Marjorie
Dan O'Donnell a écrit :
Hi all,
As many of you know, I've been wondering for quite some time about
the
basic information studies literacy we should be teaching across programmes at the university (i.e. not just humanities computing, but more broadly what should university graduates know as basic information literacy).
We're looking into establishing a campus wide certification in informatics here which we have the luxury of building more or less ex nihilo--i.e. lots of willing people and departments, very few
existing
institutional silos and/or jealousies that need to be worked in or around. The goal is to build this as a companion programme--something like a big minor, a certification, or an emphasis--that would in theory be open to combination any domain baccalaureate. In the end
you
could graduate with "English and informatics", or "Biology and informatics," etc. The informatics certification would not be
intended
to cover all possible informatics angles (so somebody doing bio-informatics or advanced humanities computing would have to do additional work). But the goal would be to produce students with domain competency and a core set of informatics skills and knowledge.
I am looking at some existing programmes--e.g. Melbourne, Syracuse, etc. But I'm also asking people helping put the programme together
to
think on the basis of a blank page: what skills, knowledge,
experience
should an undergraduate have when they finish such a programme. Here are some of mine. What do others think?
- Knowledge of basic internet infrastructure and protocols: what a
server is, how pages are served out, what packets are, how domain-names are registered and looked up, all the various transfer protocols
- Knowledge of basic languages and standards like xml, html, unicode
- Experience in setting up a multipage interactive website at an
arbitrary domain name (i.e. buy a domain name, point it at an IP address, set up the server, write the pages
- Knowledge of the major genres and applications and an ability to
analyse existing sites in terms of their use of these (e.g. know what a wiki is, newserver, version control, other things)
- Have some sense of constraints that affect the use of cyberspace:
gender, economic, legal issues, etc.
- Have a knowledge of various social organisations and processes on
the web: communities of practice, crowd sourcing
- Be able to analyse information flows and other aspects of a problem
and design technological solutions to it
- some experience with data design, analysis, and retrieval
These seem to me to be too much of a mishmash of different types of scope, categories, and the like. And also too much focussed on the type of thing I do. Any suggestions for the skills, knowledge, and experience a typical undergraduate ought to have if they were to be certified as being basically competent in contemporary web technologies alongside their core domain?
-dan
Digital Medievalist -- http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/ Journal: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/journal/ Journal Editors: editors _AT_ digitalmedievalist.org News: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/news/ Wiki: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/wiki/ Discussion list: dm-l@uleth.ca Change list options: http://listserv.uleth.ca/mailman/listinfo/dm-l
-- Marjorie BURGHART EHESS (pôle de Lyon) / UMR 5648 Histoire et Archéologie des Mondes Chrétiens et Musulmans Médiévaux 18 quai Claude Bernard 69007 Lyon - FRANCE
Digital Medievalist -- http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/ Journal: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/journal/ Journal Editors: editors _AT_ digitalmedievalist.org News: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/news/ Wiki: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/wiki/ Discussion list: dm-l@uleth.ca Change list options: http://listserv.uleth.ca/mailman/listinfo/dm-l